Description
The Harps of God poses the question, what does it take to survive? How does an individual find the will to survive in a hopeless and absurd scenario? Beliefs that the men relied on to survive in their isolated fishing villages are put to the test on the desolate icefield under a curtain of cold. In the end, their prejudices, their doubts, their bleak individual histories, their familial conflicts, their entrenched loyalties, and their myopic beliefs are what destroy many of the men's will to survive.
Those who are angry, hateful, vengeful, and hopeless lose the courage or strength to survive. What they think will protect and save them becomes the means to their death. But those who accept the impossible and develop a particular urge to defy it; those who have a cultivated personal vision, an inclusive moral system, and understanding of contradiction, an ability to love, and a compassion for humanity; those are the survivors.
The men's ordeal challenges their history and their very humanity.
-- From the Introduction by Richard Rose.
About the author
KENT STETSON C. M., is a Governor General’s Literary Award Laureate and Member of the Order of Canada. He was born and raised on a farm on Prince Edward Island, Canada. As a young adult, Kent lived in Halifax, Nova Scotia where he wrote and directed film, television and theatre. In 1990, he moved to Montreal, where he currently resides, and became a full-time writer.